Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
In part 4 of this series, I take a look at the Waxman Markey claims about the Emerald Isle, Impact Zone Ireland. My previous analyses of the same site were Waxman Malarkey: Impact Zone US Northeast, Australia, and Alaska.
Having run short of other scares, the W/M folks want to convince us that Ireland is facing a simultaneous drought and flood … it’s the alarmist’s dream, the universal disaster:
Figure 1. Our future according to Waxman-Markey
How does that work?
Here’s their claim:
THE MISTY ISLAND DRIES OUT
Irish citizens have access to 5 times as much fresh water as the average European. High measures of annual rainfall and low evaporation rates have left a legacy of short coastal streams on peat covered hills and a maze of bogs and lakes along flood-prone inland rivers. However, this legacy may be broken as climate change could yield too much water in some places at some times and too little of it in other places at the same time. Scientists predict that by 2050 winter rainfall will increase by 12 percent and summer rainfall will decline by the same percentage.
…
Most of the current primary crops in Ireland are already showing evidence of decline. The potato in particular is highly dependant on adequate water supply so it may cease being a commercially viable crop. It is difficult to comprehend that the potato, a part of the landscape so intertwined in Ireland’s culture and history, may not feature strongly in its future.
With hotter, drier summers reducing the summer water supply in inland areas, water accessibility, which currently isn’t necessary for the majority of Irish farming, may necessitate the development of new irrigation systems, which will compete with industrial and residential water demands.
Let me take these claims one at a time. First:
Irish citizens have access to 5 times as much fresh water as the average European.
The citation to this is a site called “Irish Climate”. I do not find any support for the “5 times as much fresh water” claim there … or anywhere. But then “Irish Climate” is a strange site, chock full of unverified claims and alarmist scenarios. In addition, their advertising scheme is to drop ads for things like “Online Slots” into the text at random. I was particularly taken with this one:
So yeah, too bad that things could maybe kinda change in Ireland…it’s not like in Africa, where they had it sooooo good until global warming and then BAM! Online Slots! Suddenly people were poor and starving and sick and illiterate and slaving under corrupt and brutal gangs posing as governments and religions. All since, like, 2006 or so, when the media and corporate and political world started using hip words like ‘green’ and ‘sustainable’ to prove that Things Were Being Done.
I never knew online slot machines could cause so much damage. (I disabled the link in that quotation from the site, to prevent further child deaths). But I digress …
I find no scientific support for the “5 times” claim. Actually, I was surprised when I looked into the famous Irish rain to find that the island only gets about about 1.1 metres (46″) of rain per year. So are they saying that Europeans are only getting a fifth of that (230 mm, or 9″) of rain per year? No way. So what do they mean? The world wonders.
In any case, my investigation of the Irish rain leads me to their second claim, that:
However, this legacy may be broken as climate change could yield too much water in some places at some times and too little of it in other places at the same time. Scientists predict that by 2050 winter rainfall will increase by 12 percent and summer rainfall will decline by the same percentage.
“Scientists predict”? I doubt it. Ireland is a postage stamp sized country, there’s no climate model in the world that claims accuracy at that small a scale. And climate models do very poorly at predicting rainfall in any case. So let’s look at some data. Figure 2 shows two different rainfall datasets, once again from the marvelous KNMI site.
Figure 2. Historical Irish rainfall for summer (March-August) and winter (September-February) for the area bounded by 50°-55°N, 5°-10°W.
As you can see, there is no trend in Irish rainfall, either in the summer or the winter. So once again their claims are nothing but alarmists crying wolf.
Next, let’s look at their claim that:
Most of the current primary crops in Ireland are already showing evidence of decline. The potato in particular is highly dependant on adequate water supply so it may cease being a commercially viable crop. It is difficult to comprehend that the potato, a part of the landscape so intertwined in Ireland’s culture and history, may not feature strongly in its future.
The site for investigating claims like this one is marvelous UN FAOSTAT site. It contains every agricultural statistic imaginable. It shows that 90% of Ireland’s crop production (by tonnage) is in five crops – barley, oats, wheat, potatoes, and sugar beets. Here is the production of those crops since 1961, the start of the FAO database:
Figure 3. Production of the five main Irish crops. The sugar beet data ends in 2005, with the other datasets going to 2008.
So is potato production dropping as they claim? Most definitely … but not because of any change in the rainfall. It has been dropping since the start of the record. Why? Because farmers plant what they can make the most money on for the least effort and risk. Farmers aren’t fools.
Note also that the total production of the five main crops has not changed in half a century. This shows that, rather than Irish production decreasing because of any change in climate, all that is happening is the farmers are shifting from one crop to another.
There is another way to see if the changes in food production are climate related. This is to look at the yields of the crops. “Yield” is the amount of the foodstuff which is produced per hectare. Figure 4 shows the change in yields over a half century:
Figure 4. Crop yields for the main Irish crops
If changes in the climate were affecting the crops, we would see a reduction in the yields. Instead of seeing that, we see that the yield of every one of the crops has been increasing over the period. So whatever has been convincing the Irish farmers to change their mix of crops, it hasn’t been the climate.
Finally, further down on the page, the Waxman Markey site makes the following claim:
The Irish landscape faces many pressures from global warming that will result in visual changes to vegetation and land use. Losses of habitat vital to many species of flora and fauna and the stability of the landscape itself will change due to greater weather extremes. Arable land in particular regions of the country will continue to grow fields of wheat, barley, and corn as climate changes. In other regions, however, with the emergence of warmer and dryer summers, brown fields of grass during the summer months will become much more common.
The curlew, a beloved Irish bird known for its distinct cry, is endangered by climate change.
But even a rabid AGW carbon control site like the Conservation Volunteers of Northern Ireland doesn’t believe that. They say (emphasis mine):
Threats to the Curlew
There has been a rapid decline in the population of breeding curlew in Northern Ireland over the last 25 years. The most recent survey in 1999 suggested that breeding pairs have declined by 58% since 1988. This rapid decline has been reflected in other parts of the UK and the Republic of Ireland.
The decline of the curlew is linked to the loss of their wetland habitat mainly through more intense agricultural practices, drainage of wetland areas and overgrazing by livestock. It is thought that curlews are now more vulnerable to predation and this is having a further impact on their population. As the birds nest on the ground, they are vulnerable to recent increases in predators such as foxes and crows. The poor survival rate of young birds is known to be a key factor in the decline of curlew.
In Northern Ireland, the curlew is a legitimate quarry species during the open season, although it is thought that the numbers shot are very small. It is fully protected elsewhere in the UK.
Summary: The claimed future changes in Irish rainfall have no scientific validity. The changes in potato production are unconnected to the climate. Agricultural production is not declining. The drop in numbers of the curlew is due to drainage of wetlands. And once again, the Waxman site contains nothing but malarkey.
Discover more from Watts Up With That?
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.




“So long as the people do not care to exercise their freedom, those who wish to tyrannize will do so; for tyrants are active and ardent, and will devote themselves in the name of any number of gods, religious and otherwise, to put shackles upon sleeping men.”
-Voltaire
Emotional terrorism like the “Impact Zone” BS is a part of the structure of tyranny.
regards
Why is it that I can’t see doom and gloom on the Irish agricultural horizon?
—————————-
Irish citizens do have access to five times as much Guinness.
Paul Birch says:
July 1, 2010 at 2:33 pm
Are you taking lessons from Waxman? Put some numbers on it. I get:
(1161 mm/63 people/km2) / (751 mm/112 people/km2) = 2.7, a long way from five.
How come I have to do the hard lifting? If you have a good idea, do your homework, look up the numbers, come up with the answer, cite your sources. Otherwise, it’s just handwaving.
SOURCES: Rainfall KNMI, population density Wikipedia
All these foolish Waxman Malarkey claims are either plain old lies or about what the future may bring. They are not based on any observed trends. Whenever Willis takes a closer look he tends to find the opposite of their claims or at the very least nothing to write home about.
I’m sick to death of the scaremongering lies based on computer models, the weather or uninformed, wild speculation. Future generations may laugh and ridicule this current batch of ‘leaders’ and climate ‘scientists’ who ‘were’ motivated by greed, power, scientific status or just plain wrong.
Derryman says:
July 1, 2010 at 4:17 pm
Derryman, many thanks. You say that grass for silage is the main crop. Unfortunately, the FAOSTAT database doesn’t count that. They give the 2008 production for all listed crops as:
item, tonnesBarley, 1249700
Wheat, 950700
Sugar beet, 380000
Potatoes, 371900
Oats, 176600
Mushrooms and truffles, 75000
Cabbages and other brassicas, 45000
Vegetables fresh nes, 40000
Carrots and turnips, 24000
Rapeseed, 23400
Apples, 16000
Tomatoes, 12000
Onions, dry, 8700
Beans, dry, 8500
Cereals, nes, 7400
Cauliflowers and broccoli, 7000
Lettuce and chicory, 5500
Fruit Fresh Nes, 5000
Peas, dry, 3800
Peas, green, 2600
Cucumbers and gherkins, 1550
Beans, green, 1500
Strawberries, 1400
Chillies and peppers, green, 400
Rye, 400
Currants, 140
Berries Nes, 100
Raspberries, 100
Hops, 40
(“Nes” means “Not Elsewhere Specified”)
Your local view is much appreciated.
w.
Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me!
Are you going to vote these jokers in next time?
Alan Cheetham says:
July 1, 2010 at 3:11 pm
Alan, unfortunately your server seems to be down at the moment … I’ll check back later.
w.
here’s the rainfall per country.
http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/geo_pre-geography-precipitation
Ireland is 50th below Germany, Norway, UK etc.
Didn’t that letter to Congress say the human race would be extinct by 2050? So what’s the big deal if Ireland simultaneously floods and dries up? There won’t be anyone to care.
I seem to remember an after school special in the 70s where a guy shot the last of the curlews.
Great Post!
Keep up the excellent work!!
Steve
Common Cents
http://www.commoncts.blogspot.com
Only 40 tonnes of Hops Willis? it’s a vital ingredient in Guinness .
that can’t be right 🙂
Dutch newspaper Telegraaf.nl reports on June 29th that Ove Guldberg has been named as lead author on “ocean chapter”. Any truth to this?
Looks like that curlew is the Irish polar bear.
Why didn’t they blame the absence of snakes on climate change?
Berényi Péter says:
July 1, 2010 at 4:09 pm
kwik says:
July 1, 2010 at 1:21 pm
They say there are too many people on this planet.
The numbers must be reduced, they say. So how, exactly will they proceed to reduce the numbers?
That’s already arranged for. Since the Cold War was won all nations got rid of unnecessary food stockpiles and businesses, adopting the just-in-time inventory strategy, have not made up for it. Recently the world is run on a food reserve of several months worth…..
_______________________________________________________________________
Thank you for mentioning this. People in the USA seem to think only kooks worry about the food supply.
The disaster waiting to happen can be traced back to the international grain traders and the World Trade Organization. Specifically Dan Amstrutz, VP of Cargill, who wrote the 1995 WTO Agreement on Agriculture and The 1996 USA “Freedom to Farm” Act.
Here are some good articles about the treat to our food supply:
http://www.opednews.com/articles/History-HACCP-and-the-Foo-by-Nicole-Johnson-090906-229.html
http://www.foodsafetynews.com/2009/12/the-festering-fraud-behind-food-safety-reform/
http://www.foodsafetynews.com/2010/05/food-safety-reform-and-the-enclosure-movement/
We Kiwis have appeased Mother Gaia by buying into the ETS so its now highly unlikely New Zealand will appear on Malarkey’s website of future climatic catastrophes – so there take that.
Nothing twisted about me……
I just had a thought: are there places and regions where the temperature trends as shown by raw data actually look like the IPCC/global trend data?
That would be cool to see where it really is warm. Central Park in New York City won’t cut it, by the way.
The premise is laughable but the result will be millions of human deaths, The evil lurk among us.
Reference the Curlew…”drainage of wetland areas and overgrazing by livestock”.
“Most of the Irish peat drainage was associated with the aim of reducing flooding but drainage schemes altered and accelerated after the second World War due to the need to increase livestock production in upland farms (Stephens and Symons, 1956; Common, 1970). In Northern Ireland there are only 169 km2 of intact peat left compared with 1190 km2 of total peatland (Cooper et al., 1991).”
from http://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/485/1/holdenj7.pdf
So that big sponge is not there to slowly release water anymore……Oh no! I forgot, its the hotter dryer summers!
When will this garbage end Willis? I know its important to fight this stuff but its keeping me out of the bar and Guinness sales are in free fall!
Why don’t the Green Weenies just let us all die off from tipping points already. The more oil we burn the sooner we’ll be gone. Isn’t that the ultimate goal of these Luddite hypocrites.
So, Waxman is FOS, no surprise. He has been on every issue I’ve ever seen him voice an opinion. This isn’t an indictment on Waxman. He’s crap. Anyone that has cared to watch him already knows that he doesn’t care one whit about his country. It is an indictment upon the people that keep re-electing him. Samuel Adams could not have said it better. ““If ye love wealth better than liberty, the tranquillity of servitude than the animating contest of freedom, — go from us in peace. We ask not your counsels or arms. Crouch down and lick the hands which feed you. May your chains sit lightly upon you, and may posterity forget that ye were our countrymen!”
I truly wish they knew the meaning of that statement, and I truly wish they understood that it isn’t a past sentiment, but one which holds meaning to many.
OT but an idea example for all of you out there itching to toss a monkey wrench into the AGW Monster Truck bent on trashing your neighborhood with alarmism:
Take a place that has more than a century of rainfall records and sort them according to the length of the solar cycle they occured in:
http://www.robertb.darkhorizons.org/TempGr/WvPrecipSC.GIF
In my area, the shorter solar cycles can have much drier results.
Your mileage may vary.
Got the idea from David Archibald’s new book. Thanks, David.
How about this prediction: In less than two hundred years, global warming will cause the death of everybody alive today.
“Most of the current primary crops in Ireland are already showing evidence of decline.”
I don’t have time to check, if that actually is true. It very well may be, but it should not automatically be attributed to climate change or drought. In the EU, farmers get paid very little per crops produced. The EU pays subsidies per area cultivated. As the prize of fertilizers has gone up during the last years, farmers may have done the logical thing: Reduce fertilizers and care less about how much you produce.
Here’s wordplay with the names:
Wax/Key
Wax/Mark
Wax/Mar
Wax/ey